Gleaner_19430415

VOL. XVlll THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1943 No. G
Nazareth Offers SENIORS VOTE
Summer Courses 'YES' FOR BALL
Sessions To Include
Academic Subjects,
Vocational Work
~azartth College will offer a
number of counes in vocational
fields t,his summer on rtqUHt or a
minimum of eight students. The
courses .at-e designed for students
who want an intensive cout-se in a
vocational skill, in order to tit.
them rol' Aonte special wm· service.
The length o! the single int..cns·
ivc course, beginning on June 21,
1943, will be an equivalent fifteen
weeka in u regular college pro ..
gram and will carry three col1ege
ereditt:. Such intens.ive courses
will be a-h·en from two to three
hourt a day. fh•e days a week., tor
four weeks or less. depending on
individual pro~ and efficiency.
Some of the <Ounel to b• offered
are: B&Sie Clerical Training, Com·
mercial Art, and Drafting, Faah4
Ions and Merchandising, Foods and
Nutrition, Prenursing, Bis.tory of
Latin Amcriea, Amt'ric::an History
and Government and Musie Ap.­precintlon.
These course$ may be
cont.inocd in a two-year term inal
college course fo1· ad\'anc::e work.
They will be offered as electives
in the regular c::ollege c::urriculum
leading to a d<gTee.
A number of academic courses
will be offered by the <ollege in
the regular sb weeks summer sea..
•ion. beginning July 5 •nd ending
Aupst 13. The (ollowing <ou~
are among those being otre.rtd:
$panith, Fron<h, Philosophy, So­cial
Ethica, Chemistry and Biology.
The ni«ht of Commencement,
June I, wlll mark another gala
Senior Ball in the annals of ~a:­arelh
Collert'a hiJJtory. Dinner
will bt" served to Senior Class
membtrt and the dance !or the
Senlon and th•lr guem will (ol·
low.
l::llffn Tiernan has been named
general chairman of lhe dance
with Patriell.\ Btu·•·r, Senior Class
pteJ1dt'nt, honorary c::hairman.
Ccrnldlne luppa is in charge o!
tho nt'1'1lng~mcnts; Vil-ginia Bog­dan
will &ee to it. thnt a fine or·
chestru Is on hnnd; and Mnrgat·et
Volpe will provide programs.
Cuesta will be received by Edna
Fitzgerald rmd her committee. In­vitationtl
are to be sent by June
Oispen:~a.
Tht publicity for Senior Ball is
being handltd by Jane O'Brien,
prnidtnt of :\azareth College
Prbl Bureau.
Father Thorning
To Speak May 23
Moy 23, 8sc<alaureatc Sunday,
inculty ond 15tudcnts of Nazareth
College will hnve lhe po·ivilege
o! hcodng Fntheo· Joseph F.
Thoo·nlng, Ph. 0., Litt. D., Po·o(es·
oor o! So<iology at St. Mary's Col-
1ege, t;mmeusburg, Maryland.
Jt""ather Thorning is the author
or Bui1d.,.. of tho Sod.al O'rder.
Re i1 a member of the Ex~uti\·e
Council on lbero-Ameriean Cul­tural
Rtlation' Father has: t:rav­eled
in Europe and the republiea
of South America and is an au­thorit)'
on conditions In BraziL
----------------~----------- ----
Father John Delaney Addresses Assembly;
Stresses Family as Basis of World Order
The internationally known udlo commentat01', Father John
P. Dcl•ney, S. J., visited Na~areth Collere, April 'i. Ae spoke in
the college auditorium to the Cftc:ulty, guests and atudents.
The aubjec::t. of Father Delaney'•]
apeech Wftl Tlto Church. Ameriea,
and F uture World Peaee. In his
addreas he stre-ssed tbe importance
of the peaceful, Christian family
u the foundation for a better
world, together with a realiution
or the dignity o( man. Be Mid that
any Catholic:: social action must be
baaed on a clear conception of
whAt lt means to be ubrot.hers in
Chrltt."
To insure n solid foundation fo1·
world peace, Father suggested n
!amily day of recoUection, fol­lowed
by a life spent in active
ond enthusiftatic work in the lay
apolltolate.
Father Delaney is optimistic in
hia viewa toneeming Russia. He
b convinted that Christianity so
deeply FOOted in the Russian peo-­ple
cannot have entirely disap.
peari!d during the past twenty-five
years.
Jn explaining the di.fticultiea in ..
volved in establishing a pennane:nt.
world peace-a peate based upon
juati<.,_Fathcr showed that each
of uo hM an integral part to play
in Ute establishment and main­tenontc
of such a peac:e.
Falher John P. Delanoy, S. J .
radio translator and commentator
on the world-wide social messages
Committees Draft
Plans for May Day
STAMP DRIVE BEGINS AT
VICTORY BOOTH TOMORROW
Honorary ~hairman for "llay
Day it Mary Jan• Hendrick, with
.Ruth Loren' ftl general chairman.
Among the nttendan!A to the
May Queen thla year are Vil'·ginia
Sulli\'An ond Vil'·ginio Gould, Jun­iors;
June l.nl1)• ftnd Dol'othy
Smit.h. SophOnlOfiCII; 1\nd Eileen
FiU'ley and I ret en Mal')' Bauman.
Ft·e,.hmen. The Senio1· attendant.$
and the May Queen will be kept a
secret until May Day, acco••ding to
an eotabliohed tradition.
The pageant, HanHI and Gretal,
is being adapted !rom Rumper­dinck'a
opera by VirJinia SuJii,·an
and her committee. Heading the
mu.sie committee it Avril Coch­rane;
reception. Flot·encc McGin­ni!
t; pt•opel"tltt, Ann Comfort;
costumu, J>alrJtin Goodwin, and
refo•e•hmcnt.o, Ooo·olh~ flcdding­ton.
-- LIBRARY OPENS
DOLL EXHIBIT
Beginning Ytaterday, Pan .. Amtr­ican
Day, the txhibit roGm in the
library Is !eaturinr a display o!
costumr:d dolls. Theae represent.a­tives
of Spain and Latin America
have been drtged b)• the girls in
Miu Cu~;z.et.t.a'a Spanish elas.\.
In t.ho nea1· !utul"e, SiiJter Dom~
inle hopes to hnvc n colleetion of
dot111 including speeimcn11 [ J'Om
every country Jn the wo1·ld. A gen·
erou.a Rochestet·lnn hns offered
N .. arcth Coll<gc the usc or her
several hundred dollo. 11 transpor­ta'tio:-"
c:.n be arran~ted, these. plas­ter
amba .... don or rood will will
soon make their homt In the col­lege
library.
War Increases Need
For Social Workers
From all 3ect.iona of t.hc country
tOmt!s word of the t.ren·1cndous de:­nutnd
loJ' soclnl wo1·kct·s. Open­ings
exist In agcnolca on the ted­ea
·al, state and local levels for per.
sons who will be used not only in
this country but. In the reconatrut­tion
ol the occupied and Axis na­tion&-
the need 1\a.a been var-ious­ly
estimated "tween twenty-five
thousand and forty thousand.
The Red Crou ao well aa many
graduate a<hoola J. oft'•ring (el­lo•-
shipa and ac:holarahipa for ease
worken. paychiatrle aoeial work·
~rs, medical social worker-., work~
e:o for children'• clinics, day
nurseries and other Jnstit.utions.
lt is expected thnt the demand
will con tinue long after the war.
Be tty Keeaan
Staff Members
Get Gleaner Pins
Vil·ginia Sullivnn, edlt.o1· of the
Cleaner. will nwnrd pin11 next
week to membcn o( the staff nnd
reporten in recognition of the
splendid work done th1a year.
Eligibility is b.ued on the number
of inches o{ printed material a re­porter
has !ubmilted since the Rrst
issue of the Cleanor lut October.
To win a pin, a reporter mutt have
eontributed at leut thirty lnebes.
Done in sterling ailver. Lht"'e pin.s
wiU be copies o( the! detirn on
the front poge of the paper. The
y~ar, 1942·1943, will 11.ppear on
the ,back.
Sodality Invites Air
Cadets To Da nce
The Army Air CorpJJ cad eta.
unde1· Lieutenant Wayne, will be
honorary gue!ts at the program
dan<e to be held Mny 15, and
sponoored by Nazareth College
Sodality.
The affair will abo witntas the
SO<ial debut or the war tong
being P""P"red by a <ommitte• o!
JunioJ• and Senior music majon~
under the leaden:hip of Roun1ary
Tierney.
Mary J•ne Hendo·iek, Sodality
Prefect, is honornr)' chairman and
Jean Foley) Chairman of the So~
eial Life Committee, Ia goncn~l
ehah-.nan of t.he evPnt.
Debate Club Eutertai11s
College of St. Rose
The College o( SL R- in Al­bany
debated with Nazareth on
Friday, April 2. In the dormitory
lounge. the St. Rooe debaton. Rooe­mary
\VeJc.h and Helen lfacthia
from Xaureth, tbraabed out some
of the most preuin.r poat.war
problems. Cathy Statt waa <hair­man
of this diee:uuion.
To entertain new mcmben. the
club is planning a picn ic to be held
in the nea•· f u ture.
Father Llntr., the fnculty and studcn~.a of Nazareth College
are offering dally prayers in the oratory for your speedy recov­ery.
And, with this rreeting, they send a. sincere wish t,hat you
will be bac.k at Natareth very soon.
Tomorrow, April 16. Naureth
College, und<'l' th• auspi<oa or the
S.V.C.V., will begin a <ampaign
to fw-tber the sale of del~nse
ttamps among the studcnt.t.
Betty Keegan, ehah·mon of t.he
<h·i\'e, announc::cs that her commit ..
tee hns p1ann~d a p1·ogum tor
each t•emaining Tt1esday and }i"ri·
day of the month of April. All A<·
tivity wnl center about t.he VIc·
tory Booth in the cafeteria durinc
lunch hoo~ The program wiU eon­sist
in the community l!-ingi~ o(
''ictory songs played by a victory
band. In parti<ular the band will
feature victory songs written by
music students in theory e:lau.
Betty has hopes that her commit,..
tee may wo1·k out a few skit. to
present bdo•·e the tafct.-c::ria au­diences.
This campaign is in kceJling
with the Ap1·il nation-wide drive
ro,. $13,000,000,000 in stomps
nnd bond•. The goal for the Col·
lege is to double tho overage of
ten dolll'll"$ a week. -­Noted
Lecturer
To Be Speaker
At Commencement
The Com~enc. spea.ku
for this year will be lhe noted
leather and leetut'er, Or. Je~mc
G. Kerwin, an Ameritan·born
educator, now in the department.
or political ~<ien<e al the Uni·
vertity of Chicago. Or. Kerwin
!l·cquently sits in on t.he Chicago
Round Table of the Ah•, ond Ia o
c::Jofte associate of Pl·e.sident U utch­ens
of the Univenity.
Retently, Dr. Kerwh1 orgAniled
undergraduates AI election watc.h­en
in Chicago's polling placa.
This formed the practical J)tlrt of
their nudy of political acience.
An unupec:ted by-produe.t wu a
«reat number of conviction• in
election fnluds.
A.s dean of s~ial ~eience atu·
dents since 1935, Dr. Kerwin hu
planned a genet·al course in t.hc
1ociaJ scicnees at the Unive.raay
ot Chicago. This i.s considered one
of the outst.tlnding coua·sca in the
countl'y.
Sodality Honors Our
Lady With Li'Ying Rosary
On Mareh 25, the !eaot or tho
Annuntiation of the Blessed Vir ..
gin Mary, the Sodality pr ... nttd
an inspiring program in the col­lege
auditorium. A group ot 1ixty
girls, dad in cap and gown, par.
tieip.ated in a Uving Rosary. Tho&e
representing the Our Fathtr e:ar­l'i•
d lighted <andleo, while those
1-epresenting the Hail Mary car­o
·ied the blue banner of Our Lad)•.
Mary Jane Hendriek, PrdeeL of
the Sodality, led the wny, carr ying
Father received his theological
de:rreea in Rome and later did ad­vanced
work in $0Cia l studjes in
Parit. Re Wlla recalled to Rome by
Pope Piu.s XI to act as a special
o! the Pope. Thus, he is an author·
lty on the lntco·po·ctation or the ]
Molal cncy<licols. The New York
City and Baltimore Institutes of
Social Order were founded under
hia directl.on. 1-ti.s is the voice that +
broad<asted In English the fun•ral
oervi< .. !or Pope Pius XL ·--------------------
"' tho <ru<ifix. Each of the four
clnsses compot;ed t.he last four dec­ades,
while the Sodality leader•
made up the fi rst. Alter tho reci­tation
of the Rosary, Benedjction
o! the most BI-d Sacrament - was given by Father LinU.
2 THE GLEANER
THE GLEANER ------
NAZARETH COLLEGE lj A Memoir I PublicnUon Office: George P. Burns Press, Inc., 49-51 Nor<b Water St. f
1~ +---------------------
voL. xvm TRURSDA Y-APR!L 15, 1943 No. G
Published Monthly
The Students of Na;o;ureth College, Rochester, N.Y.
f:DlTOR-IN-CRIEF
Vlr;:lnla Su.lll\'an
Je6nno T~dy
NEWS EDITOR
Patrlda Goodwin
FEATUnE EDITOR
OoVoNie Foley
Ol}SlN&SS MANACf!R
H• len. M.Aeebln.
Dol'OlhY O'Malley
HUMOR EDITOR MUSIC EDJTOR
Cat-berine McCarthy Rita Meyers
ALUMNAB t;DlTOR PICTUR£ EDITOR
M•rleu~ Wfeku Marjorie Klee
SOCU.'TY EDITOR
Elleeh Mabonu·
DRAMATIC EDITOR ART F.J)ITOR
Ruth Lorenz Ednn. Sol'endo
By DORIS DIERDORF, '45
Lost, long lost. is Vienna,
Vienna o£ sweet romance.
+
Gone O.I'C the spa1·kling cham·
pagnc-s,
And the gay st.l'ains of the dance,
When comrades forgave all !aults;
And gone are the nights of en·
dcarnumt
In tune with the li1ting waltz.
In theil· place lies a bomb-shat­te.
l. 'cd town!
SPB~~;;ty EJ!lJ::R LlT~:t~R'ki:~~R CIRCUir;:::e'Op~ot':!NAGER I Lost. long lost is Paris.
HEAD TYPIST EXCH.ANGE £DITOR Paris serene in its Chl'll'IU,
Loyola Notaa An~~:ellne CoMfort. Gone are the men and the dam-
SPORTS
Pat o·crdy
EHeen Farley
Kay Cutlttr
Det-tY Dooley
Pttl't'Y P1ahcrty
Janot Mttlstn¥abl
BUSIN&SS STAFF
Marle Hatl"'er
Joan C.p~Hino
Rosemary W t!lch
bbry E•th.r 0ant~h7
MAry Lom.ba.rdo
NEWS STAFJi'
Betty Blltt.enby
Mildr~ Okolo.,Jcs
Dorlt Dunlea
TYPISTS
Mnl'1fie Kraua
MuUyn Moore
Marie Di Giorf:IO
OtUY Driacoll
Dorothy Smllb
Kay Foley
Jun Scha.l'lh
.MadtUoe Nueelt•lll
sels,
Who walked there arm in arm.
Long forgotten are silks and sat-ins,
And the cavaliers so strong;
Gone at·e the giddy cafes
And the wine, women, and song .
In their place lies a bomb-shat ..
M.ar7 Jan« Sehwart¥
AvrU Cochrane
Peac-Y Deal
PEATUR€ STAFF
Oorit Dle-rdol'f
Alice VandeVoorde
Ann JJ.o~•n
f'raceet OuU
Ro.emary t)ool~}'
OetlY C•u
te•·ed town! Let Us Be Glad and Rejoice
Helen Mary Bauman
Dori• Ann Flaherty
Mary Moin nnhl
ihJen Hammond
1942
Dear Bill,
SOCIETY STAFf'
Helen Jloru&n A.vn.,• lllotnthan
Joyce Sehuler Oorothy Ann K•IIY
MUSIC STAFF
Bett)' KeeQ:an Corir:me Freer Mildred Clarke
M<mb<r 1943
Q.ssocioled Colle5iale Press
Nazareth College
Brighton Station
Rochester, New York
April 15, 1948
So you sailed last Tuesday. That was quite a shock.
But, it woke me up to something I should have seen all
along. And now, I've got to pour it all out in one Jetter, If
r can.
You see, the crux of the matter is this-I've changed.
Oh, not in the way I feel about you, but in myself. I'm not
the same gixl I was before you went away; and that's as
Lost, long lost is Venice.
Venice wilh its life $0 gay.
Gone are t.he giddy gondoh•s
Swaying neath the Milk)' Way.
Long forgotten arc bright stripJ)C-d
awnings,
And the gondolier singing his tune.
Gone is the strum or g-uital's,
And love 'nealh the pale yellow
moon.
In theil· place lies a bomb-shat­tcnl'd
town!
Lost, long Jost is Madrid,
With its love o! showy fight.
Gone are t.hc gay toreador$-,
In tbeil' b•·ee<:hcs of btoc~de
bright_
Long forgotten the ct'owded ar·
enn,
And ftowc1-s in jet black hah·.
Cone m·c: the fine lace mnntilla.s,
Balconies, women fair.
In their plaee Jics a bomb·sha~
tercd town!
it should be because you're not the boy you used to be Dear Cleaner Girls:
either. We're both growing up.
Remember-you used to call me "Bank"-short for
"hank of hair"·? Of course, that was ages ago. It may even
have been as far back as high school. But, you were right
-that's all Twas-just a hank of hai•· with "naught behind
it." I was interested in having fun, in perfecting my "line."
in improving my tennis game, in "wowing" the stagline in
my new formal. Those are the things I thought about and
talked about. My yardstick for measuring the value of
things was : "Is it fun?" Of course, I was a Catholic then
too, but I just never thought about it much.
Then, a while ago I heard someone say : "You've got
to order your life; and you can do it by putting first things
fu-st." Isn't it q ueet· how sometimes a chance remark can
set the old machinery in motion, and before you know it
you've come up with a brand new plan of me? Well, that's
As you will notice, the dnte, the
exact place, and the names of
some of the girl1; in the chorus
hnve yet to be tonfirmed. Joan
Du.r;an has this l&st information,
and either you or r should get it.
All right, 1 will. But the place,
Nazareth, may be safely assumed.
T hope ; and the dnte can be vague,
as it is in [he stOl'Y·
Puddles of purple passion,
1 1·cmain your obedient servant.
Ar&on Yells
Charlotte 2518
(Ask fo•· Opal)
(Editor's not.e: This is an example
of the cause of our despail·. Now
do you wonder why we weep wet
teat'S into OUI' pillows at night.
and why ou1· hair will have turned
to sil\'er b)• Easter?)
more or less what happened to me. And, then, your leaving -----------­so
suddenly just brought matters to a head.
I know I'm putting this badly; but then you know T
never could snag the right words for the ideas generating
inside. What I really want to say is this. You said good-bye
to a girl. but you'll be coming home to the woman you de­serve.
Everybody has a job to do; and now 1 know mine.
In the order of "first things first," it's to save my soul and
to help other people save theit·s. It's frequent participation
i~ the Mass and reception of the Sacraments--not just dur­ing
Lent, or during the war, but all my life. It's to make a
home where the Trinity will be just as much a part as you
-or me~r our children-a place of gentleness and good­ness
where the inhabitants are vital members of the Mys­tical
Body, and where together we can use what the past
has taught us to build a bright and shining and, above aU,
a peaceful life for the futm·e. A tiakct, "' taaket,
On Easter Sunday, the third day after His death,
Jesus Christ rose gloriously and triumphanlly. On that day,
exactly as He foretold it, while the tomb was well-guarded
by Roman soldiers, the huge stone was t•olled back, and
with a brilliance which momentarily blinded the guards
and threw them in terror to the earth, Christ rose from
the gt·ave. The Gradual for Easter strikes the keynote of
th is glorious feast: "This is the day which the Lord hath
made; let us be glad and rejoice therein. Give praise to
the Lord. for He is good : fo•· His mercy endure~h forever."
The Church puts off her robes of mourning and afflic­tion,
and clothes herself in the glory she has f•·om God be­cause
her Divine Founder, Who was in bondage for our
sine, has come f'or·th tJ·iumphant and free. Wby should we
not rejoice? We rejoice because by His Resurrection from
the dead Our Lord and Saviou•· has kept the promise He
made to the Apostles when He said: "Desb·oy this Tem­p
le, and in three days I will raise it up.'' We rejoice, too,
because this day marks our resurrection into a new life­the
life of Christ.
Further than that, we l'eJO•ce on this great feast be­cause
the Resurr ection has put the stamp of divinity upon
the teachings of Christ. How would the Apostles ever have
carried out Christ's command to teach His doctrine to a ll
nations if there had been no Resun·ection? But with the
triumph of the Resurrection the theme of the Apostles'
teaching was : "Christ Jesus that died, He that is risen
again." The Apostles preached the Cross and insisted upon
the Resurrection.
On Easter Sunday. we see Our King return in the full
splendor of His triumph over death. And we put off our
garments of mourning and affliction, and we sing: "Alle­luia,
Jet us be g lad and rejoice!"
One Big Clique
When Naza•·enes get together to "hash things over,"
they oflen wind up discussing what is wrong with our
school spirit. Its absence is attributed to one major cause,
lack of cooperation. A number of cures have been sug­gested-
S. R. 0., bigger and better Christmas and St. Pat­rick's
Day parties, activities which bring all of Nazareth
together sb·iving for a common purpose. But these cures
are superficial; they do not reach the basic problem. They
are not capable of bringing us together permanent ly.
In one Student Hour, the president of the Undergrad­uate
Association mentioned that cliques are an impo•·tant
reason for our disunity. This cause certainly has not been
stressed sufficiently. In fact, most of us hardly gave it a
second thought. We merely keep going along in our own
little exclusive groups, seemingly oblivious to the fact that
the rest of Naza•·eth even exists. But cliques are a real ob­sb
·uction to school-wide cooperation and unity.
Is this the way to seek cooperation and school spit·it?
Can we expect others to cooperate with us if we not only
ignore them until we need their help and ideas, but prac-
1
tically exclude them from our friendship?
Let us resolve to be a tittle bit friendlier to all of Naz-
Juniors Become Mother Hubbards
For Week-End-cupboards Will Be
Filled " Point" by "Point"
Despite difficulties brought about b>• Cood rationing and lae.k or
trAnsportation the Junior Class is continuing plant for ita houseparty
and it determined to make it the biggest. and bHL party of the year.
erahip of Jeanne Te~dr, will soon Debate Club Sends
ArTangement.s, under the lead-,
be complete to obtam the Rottiry
Sunshine Camp at Durand Enst- Delegates To
man Pn•·k for the second week-end p C f
In May. With its trails, bench, eace on erence
lnrgc t•ccreation halt, and oil 0 Mnl·eh 26.27" another
facilities for hiking, riding, and n
An all uround (:ood time, the camp WA!J token towards a bettel' post­i•
a perfect setting for n perfect war world when students (rom a
week~end. number of nearby co11eges mtt at
The entertainment c:ommitlee Colpte Univuaity, Hamilton, ~ev.•
directed by Agnes llurtha usurea York to dbc-\111 plans for Lhe. new
us that preparations are well un­der
way for keeping e\·eryone hap­py
any hour of the day or nighL
All will have an ample opportun ..
it)' for their domest,ieity.
peac-t-.
Ruth Lo1-enz, Jean Foley, Jean
Schanu. and Claire Yarter rcpre-ae.
nted Na~areth College. Miss
The theme of the housepart)' RiUt Sc::ott, faculty adviser of t he
might. well be, •'t.he w~ek.end JJhall Debate Club. ateompanied the
be filled with mus ic, and the a.s ..
wlrcnmenls which infect the week girla. A lew of the other eoJieges
eholl told theh· tents like the •·epJ"C!sented we1•c Colgate, Elmira,
Arnb1 and ns silently steal nwny!' Wells nnd Wllllnms. The meetings
F ASHIONT ALK
By E ILEEN
With Easter in the offing, spring
clothes take the spotlight. SuiU.
are the thing in all tbe- popular
apring shades of pale grey, tocoa
brown, navy blue, and ye.llow.
Various &hades ean be s.uggeated
for ac-C'euories, but. for grey or
navy auits white i.& thP most popu­lar.
For coeoa brown, a e:ont:rut­lng
•hade or brown 01' kelly green
ia 3uggested, while with yeUow,
novy'a the thing.
For lhat "extro something" on
nny eull., t1'y some Kolinsky skins
or uble-dyed squirrel fur.
Cal fakin bags and shoe.s in
matching octo mo.kc o. ::;mGrt Com·
bination with • uits, coats or
dresa.H.
The beautiful spring ·weather
we've been e njoying lately brought
with It a hearty interto:!t in nev.•
apring and aummer e:ott-ens.. Stripes
with rutrlts seem to ~ about the
mOIL popular of the U\1'eraJ at.)'les.
A red and white peppermint st.riped
dreu , with three-quarter sleeves
and aquare ntck edged with ruf­nes
Ia very rresh and au.mme,.y.
Dutcher linen two-piece dreS1;ea
arc oxtl'(lme1y popular again this
ICA8on in navy, green, red, ye11ow
and brown.
took the fot•n1 of debates and dis--
c:u8slons.
Our repre.aentalive$ have l'e­marked
about the novel wa)'" in
which the discussions were carried
on. There wa• a permanent c:hair ...
man. a rotating •ub-committee,
and an expert wltne$5. Students as
well u ra~ulty advisors were wit-
A II the phuet of post-war plan­ning
-.•hi~h ~ould possjbJy be
brought. up In the ~ourse of four
disc.u.saions, were e:ons.idered-a
general back-ground organization,
and apctlne ptoposals for lrusting
peneo. The meeting ende!d with a
summn1·y or the conclu5ions ag-t���eed
upon by the cnth·e aq embly.
Seuiors "Schuul" Selves
For Teaching Po.sition.s
.. Where. 0 where, are the grave
old seniors! Safe now in the wide,
wide world."
Yes. they are ufe now in the
widr., wide world. Some of tbe.m
have jobs all lined up for next
year and numbered among them
tu·c Clal"i31-e Martens, Florence
McOinnlo. Ellen Flynn, Florence
Sin•, Virginia Jaznk and Ma>·eella
CauncJd.
ClArisse will u•e the golden rule
next year as the traditional
"8chool marm•• in the high school
In Gorham. New York. Clarisse
will teaeh both Latin and English.
FJorenct Mc:Cinni.s has just
obtained a job in Nunda, .Xew
THE GLEANE R
STUDENTS ELECT OFFICERS OF
UNDERGRAD FOR 1943-1944
New officer• of th• Und.,·vaduate Auociation, Mar;ieUe Wl<.lce.s,
tre .. urer; Jan• Kredc•l, pre•ident. and. Kay Cutler, secret&ry, tallc
o•e.r plan• for next year. Catherin-e Mc:Ca.rt..lliy, •ic$-pre•ident, is not
in the pictur•.
Be•ming facts and warsages
distingui.shed Undergrad'a new
officers for the year 1948·44.
Jane Kreckel, next year's p•·esi ..
dent of Undorgrad, tops a very
out.swnding cn1·cer ns accretnry of
Undc1-grnd und p1·caidcnt of the
Junior Close with this new honor.
Jane also has the distinction of
having been gen~nl chairman of
the lint S.R.O. Her abililiea ~un
in many different nelda. She playa
a neal game of baseball and
proves her worth on the basket.
ball court. She iJ lho girl who likes
green 1hoes and chocolate cake.
painting (bouaea especially) and
crazy poetry.
Her able auiltant, Catherine
MeCarthy bu a >·eeord too. For­tunately
h. is a good one too. Sec­retary
of the Fre1hman Class and
treasurer o! Underg1·ad are of ..
flees which hove given her a
chance to display hca· mnny tal·
ent.s. Did you know there is no
pulJing the wool ovcl· her eyes
when it. comes to lnmb? She loves
small towns, Medina eapeeially,
salt on be.r peanut butter sand­v.;
chee, and corporab who have
just been made aeregant.t-, and
card!, but ap.are her from Bob
Hope, waiting lor people. getting
up in the moming, and calling- her
roommate.
Mariette Wickes gave up the
position of secretal'y of Undcrgrad
to take over that of t.a•ea&ut-et·.
She also is an able student and a
very vel·satllc one. Lllngungca
s~etn to be a cinch for he~
French and Spanish especially.
S.R.O. is weJI on ita way to auc:­c:.
ess this year under her eap.nbte
direction.
Mariette love. tea-in faet, she
loves it .so much that ahe waten
her tea bag on an avera.ce of t\ve
times every noon hour. Among
her favorite apot"tl are awimming,
bicycling and basketball.
Kay Cutler c:ame from A ubum
to take over the dut.iu Rrat of
Freshman Student Council repre­sentative
and then of JSecreLary of
Undc1·grad. She hat an amazing
talent for organizing things. Sports
nre all down he.- alley; und hel's
is one case where that l'Cd hair
does not mean n 8ery tcmpe1'.
Besides sports, she likes cherry
pie. John in the ca.feterla, tho cot ...
or brown. She especially dlallkea
people who do not reapond hnme ..
diately-wbetber it ia to leu.en
or ci:n:umstanc~
8
"Being" in Scripture Cla.s.s
l.s April Fool ( i.slme.ss)
It 's: a funny thing, but one day
a short time ago the Juniors ac­tually
had run in "dear, o1d acrip­ture."
So did their teather.
It happened thal thio term lhe
Junior Ch•so has both ontology
and scripture on Thursday - on·
tology at 10:20 and scripture at
I :05--<~nd it so happened that this
year Thursday tame on AJ)ril
Fool's Da)•, Ot• vice verso. U. wns
noised at·ound by several peoplo
"in the knowJI that Father Lintz
would not be in school in the ott..
ernoon, and that scripture tiAS3
would be held at 10:20 Instead of
ontology. Father arrived ''"d be-­gan
class, uw e saw last. time that.
unit..r-" and 'April Fool' aound­ed
from the lour cornen of the
room. v ... the class had fallen for
it hook, line, and sinker.
Just "' be agreeable, Falher
said that if seriptu:re wu wanted,
there would be scripture, and tt.lso
a littl• quiz to go with it. Note
booka opened, pens made ready
for action, and despairing glnncee
begged Fat he1· not to ruin the
Juniors' faith in humanity. "Point
out the fact that there i.1 no con·
tradiet.Jon between the doctrine ot
Saint Luke, chnpter 11, verae 6&,
and the s«:ond epistle of St.. Paul
t.o the Ephesian.s, chApter S, verse
26. The blow bad !allen.
It was just too bad for Falher'o
quiz that St. Luke got tired and
only wrot~ 54 vena; in that. par-­ticular
ebapter. The payoff wu
that the th~e con1pirators ,.,.ho
arranged the firsl Uttlc joke had
the tables turned as Father him·
self added the second one.
Kitten to Die For Scie11ce
ltJ Attatomy Lab
By BETTY DOOLEY '44
Another addition to the u fam­ily"
in the highly populaLcd second
flonr 1Aht; ar••ived Jut woek. The
neweat member, • half-grown,
fuzzy gray kitten, variously ltnown
as .. pU$$y," •··kitty," or "that darn
c:at_.' se.e.ms to be quite happy in
be.r ne.w home., eve.n thou.ch sbe
Rize.s e\·ery opportunity to escape
-usually to tbe amuse.me.nt of Or.
Eastham's calculus and phyaie•
elaue.s.
But pussy's caJ•c!ree existence
will $00n be over, for her nervous
system has been dedicated to the
cause of science. The Junior nnd
Senior anatomy studcnt.e Are
scheduled to dissect it this week
-that ils. if they can screw UJl
enough courage to part from their
pet- and we nec.d scarcely eay
that few survive such attent.ion
from our science students I
York. Florenc-e taught there not -------------------------­Bul
weep not for this lucky kit­ten.
In furtherin~r the lmowled_.
of the. seien~e major. hu last
words might we.ll be: "lt iJ a (ar.
far better thing that I do, than 1
Pat Goodwin Model• Suit by P•tty
To complete your Eas-ter outfit,
don'l forget your jewelry. Initialed
and jeweled earrings are just made
for an aJ)ring clothes, especially
when worn with matebing braee-­leu.
That.'a all for now, kids, so have
a p.la Easter vaeation.
I The officers and men1ben o( +
Lhe Boftl'd of F>·emin Mission
Unit would like to thnnk the
glrla of Nazareth CoUege tor
tho wonderful spirit of enthu­alaam
and cooperation they have
shown during the year.
·------------------+
lon~r ago for a day and she hl<es
h. very mueh. Next year she will
c-onduc-t her Ol'('hestra and bands
in a brand new school.
EUen alao has a mu..sic position
in Silver Springs, New York, but
ehe wiJI vRry her course enough
to kCCJ) her students in trim and
tcneh physical education.
Flo1•ence Sins Is to be a mem­bet
· of the Po•·t Byron faculty
next. yCAI" teaching social studies.
ll you don't know where Port
Byron is. it la not far from Monte­zuma.
Our science department will be
c-apabl)' represented this year at
£uLman Kodak by Virg-inia Ju.­ak.
Virginia i1 letting no grass
grow under her feet: she goes to
work on June 2.
Well, It looks •• If the music
has It--Marcella will teach in
Avon.
Liborty Limerick:
Here Ia our Job and it's r08h • - -
Buy war bonds so fast
That Hitler can't laat
And the Japa will collapse in the
cruh l (Adapted)
This United Nations Conlerence
wu organized by the Model A .. have e\•er done. • - •. ,
Nazareth Represents
New Zealand At
League Conference
umbly of the League of Natlona, .-------------,
Middle Atlantic: Division, to wbil'!h
29 colleges belong.
A com.muniet is n person who
has given up hopo of becoming a
capitalist.
At the Model United Nations
Conference, held nt Hamilton Col­lege,
!rom M!ll'ch 18 to 20, Naz­areth
College wa• "epreaented by
Patricia Doyle, Suzanne De Prez, r--- - ---------,1
Virginia Sullivan, J eanne Teddy Religious Cards
and Mariette Wlckeo, with Dr.
Aaron Abell aa moderotor. Religious Gifts
The purpose or the conference TUCKER'S
was to atimulate diteussion of is.-
aues viul in the .. ublilhment of Religious Gift Studio
a Just and atable world order. A 74 EAST AVENUE
plan for post-war organization uBuy Where
wq drawn up, with each atudcnt The Clerg-y Buy"
present. participating on one of L------------.JI
the four eommlalona. Mariette r-------------,1
Wi~ku aeTVed on Commiuion !­Commission
on World Politic:al Or­ganization;
Patricln Doyle on Com ..
mission 11-Commlu lon of the
Enforcement of Pea co; Vh·ginia
Sullivan ond J eanne Teddy on
Commission Ill - Commission on
World Economle ln ~gration; and
Suzanne De Prez on Comm.i.ssion
IV-Comm.iuion on Human Rights
George T. Boucher
Florist
422 Main Street Eaet
STONE 96
JOSEPH J.
BUCKLEY
Eas ter ReJjgioua Creetina
Cards
Fathe.r Stedma.a M U•al
SL A.n.d.Tew Daily Miual
Th• C.tbolic M.i ... . l
My PraJe.r Boolc
BJe .. sed Bo Cod
New Revi .. ed
New Testame.at Bible
Rosa.rie.J - Me~daJ. - Lockoh
Combination
P rayer Book and Rosary
Kita for Servicemen
TRANT'S
96 Clinton A•e. N.
115 F'ra.n.Jclio St.
Rodle.t.ter, N. Y.
and their International Protection. 1...------------...J l-- --- ------_J
4
SECRETARIAL CLUB PRESENTS
EASTER FASHION PARADE
Joyce Lohu•, June Smith •nd Eileen Mahoney
l"h'e a pre•iew of the Fa•hion Show.
lt. ls almost Easter; and to show
Nau...,th tbe lateot thing in cloth ..
the Sec...,tarial Club will present
ita annual fashion show toda)'­thlo
year called the "Easter Pu­ade."
•uu Hunt, who specializes in
collerfenne clothes at McCurdy's,
Ia coming to Nazareth to talk over
the &pring clothes problem and to
show something suitable for Ea.st...
or ond also fo1· Commencement
week.
According to custom, the high
apot oC the ahow will be n mock
bridal party composed o! students
of th• eoUoge. Thi• custom is un ..
uaualJy AJ)propriate this year since
ao m.an)' o! tbe Senion have
already received engagement rings
and plan to be married shortly
after l"tadualion. As always, the
n•mo of the bride is kept secret;
and man)• will be the ''obs.u and
"al\s" u a member of the Senior
Ou The News Exchange
Swinging into tbe tide of stepped·
up production, Immaculata has
adopted for the fi1-at time in it4
hiato•·y an accelerated program for
ita atudcnt.s. Undet• this progJ·am,
which is on a purely vo1untar)•
bawia, a new scholastic yur will
begin June 14 and will continue
through the summer months.
Immaculat.an College­March
19, 1943
In addition to gi\oing Cutler
Union hosteues a thrill quite r&-.
cenUy, ~ln. Franklin D. Roose.
velt pve them the scare of their
lives. When the first lady an·
nounced that she was ready to
leave, aeveral members of the slu·
dent body found themselves em·
bnrrassed nnd panic stricken-her
coni had dl•appea .. ed from the
tccnc. Alter t~n minutes of U·an·
Ue search while M ra. Roosevelt
lurked back sl$ge, the hallowed
Article wu unea11:hed behind a
ma1e of props end $tage settings.
Tho Campus Times-Mar. 12, 1943
Word bas been received that a
qualifying lest ror the Army·
Eucharistic Committee
Still Discusses Liturgy
Clau •tepa forth in bridal white
to the tune of the wedding marc.h.
Katherine Mayer. president of
the club, il ceneral chairman of
the atrair. Ruth Mater bas the
pleasant task of decorating the
rYm with apring flowers of purple
and gold. Invitations are being
sent out by Muion Teddy and her
committee; while June Smith and
tho glt·Js a.Niating her are provid·
ing tho mu8ic.
The fo llowing gb·ls will model
"Eaa:l..cr bonnct11": Pat ricin Doyle,
Gertrude DIPaoquale, Ruth Mn·
tcr, Cel'aldino Vandewater, Bar­hJu-
a k"l'lll)', l-IPIPn O'RriPn, Ro~.
mar)• Tierney. Su&anne De Prez,
Catherine StaU, Joyce Loftus, Po·
tricia BaiT)', Virginia Jauk, June
Smith, Vlrgonia Gould, Eileen llo·
honey. Agnea Moynihan, Dolores
Moyen. Dorothy Wegman, Doris
Dierdorf, Htlen Mary Bauman
and CAtherine Fiacber.
NaY)' College Training program
wm be 11dmini1tered to all male
Atudenll who have attained their
&eventcenth bh·thday and have not
yet reached their twenty .. secoud
birthdny by July !, 1943. The ex·
aminatlon will JU'ovide in!orma ..
tlon useful to the Armed Forces
In oelecting •tudents for college
tn~inlng under the Army special­ized
iraininr programJ and in
~lauifying all othen in respect to
relative Lrainability.
The Leader-liar. 23, 1943
With conforming minds. Xavier­ites
began the Lenten season with
a ftrm determination to make this
Lent a time of special prayer for
peate. They are cogni1ant of the
fact that by prayer and by pr-ayer
alone pence and order will b~ re­ator<~
d to tho world, and they fully
I'CA1i%C t h C cmcnciouaness of
JlrA)Iet·; consequently thoy are
hopeful that by their prayer and
bf the 1>rayer of all, peace and
order will be onco again restol'ed
in the world and that the bellig­erent
fore~• will soon lay down
arms.
The Xavier !Jerald- Mar., 1943
Recently a Captain's eap ap­peared
in the Navy Department
with a pink..cheeked young faee:
under it, not a day over 19. The
boy wore a navy raincoat, which
bore no insignia. While eledr-l.fted
spectators wnt.ched, he stripped il
off, revealing nn enaign'a .stl'ipe on
his sleeves.
THE GLEANER
LIT LAB
By ERICA KLEMENS '45
E,·erybody Is talkinr about the
greatHt problem o! the luture:
the foundations of the pos<·wor
world. And among All the clns.sea
discussing it-writera have finally
come to think about the. part they
play in it. Sir Normnn Augen­Nobel
Peace prize Winner of 1936
-asked the queotlon: "Shnll We
Writers Fail Agaln?"
The question iml)lita the ad•nis­sion
of previoua failura--and no
one is readier t.o admit. that tban
Sir ~orman. If in a civilization
&5 literate and "educated" a. ours
a e:atastrophe aucb as tbe present
is possible-then it lo a pretty
good sign that aomething is wrong
with what. is beina- read and
taught.
.. Literature ia tho intt1·pr-eta·
tion of expericnee"-but the writ.
.... oC 1920·l040 Coiled mi•erably
in interpreting the experience or
1914- 1918. They have been u01able
to answer the comm01l mttn's qucs­tjon:
What. mufllt I do to be saved
from anothoe· wnr? And the diffi ..
culty was not a Jnck of answers
but rather a superftuity of con­tradicting
advicea. John Cith;en,
who hq been taught to ""ad them
all-but hu not been taught to
~ritie:ize and choose betwe-en them,
gave up in eonfaion.
Among the cau.sea for confusion
Sir Norman Angell counts a gross
misinterpretation of the relation
of politie:al power to economic wel·
fare. such aa it rcftectcd in Lind·
bergh'a remark that ~<the cause of
thi& W41' is that Oritnin owns too
much ot the wo•·ld nnd Germany
too little-not taking Into con•id­eration
the dif'fer<!nce between
<~owning" and '1roverning" and
completely ignoring the whole oot­up
o! the Briti•h Commonwealth.
Another is the overemphasis on
precise forms of orpni&ations, on
constitution. and too litt.le em-
Buffalo Welcomes
Nazareth Sodalites
"Shuffle orr to Rufralo" was the
theme of Naznreth's twenty dole­gates
to the Sodnlit.y convention
as they bonrdcd the tJ·uin on Apl'il
4. Sta·nnge to say, it was diacov­ered
l.hat a meeLing of thn.t.. kind
eou1d be entertaining u well ~
educational.
The oubject of the diacussion
was "Catholie Youth Pre.J)ares lor
Pe.a~e-in the Spiritual Lire, in
the Intellectual Life, and in the
Rome Life." Opinloru flew thick
and Cast as younr people f«>m the
leading high Khoola and coUeges
in western New York reported on
what their scboots we..., doing and
planned what further 11teps eould
be tnken by Catholle youth to en·
sut·e a ujust and lneting pe .. ce."
Mon•fgnor Leo A. Smith preeid·
ed ln the nbsencc of Biahop DufTy
or Bu!Talo. Tho I'CIJ>Onoibility of
Dr. Lintz and Dr. McNamara Entertain
Boarders In European Travelogue
The boarders have ~en aeeing Or. Md\amara showed moviet
''stars" lately. Yes. and these of his tra\~ets in Palestine, Egypt,
stars are movie stan. Said 1tara ltal).. France, and Austria. An·
also produce their own pfeturu, cient history students enjoyed the
and these producers nnd atAt'l are \•iewa o{ the Temple or Kal"nftk,
none other than Dr. Lintz and Dr. the P>••·amid.s and the Pantheon.
MeNnma1·a. The movies \\'1!1'0 Erica KJemcns particulurly liked
shown on two ditf4wcnt occaaionM those scenes of Venice. The pic­and
wcr"C taken b)• the priests tures in Palestine followed the
during theh· trips abroud. Way o! the Cross as it ls now. The
Dr. Lint:'s were taken in Switz- processions at Lou1-des were made
erland, some o! them depicting 1 through the streets, as were those
the attempts of the novices to mas- in Swib:erland i but most beauti.
ter the ort ot okling with oome di ... ful of all was the torchlight pro.
astrous results. E'·en ir he w .. a ee:gion at night around the statue
litUe reluetant to tell who the of Our Lad)'.
novi.ee was that "bit the dual/'
C\'t.ry good •kier deserves • rest
now and apin. To quott: Dr.
Lintz, •'You can alwaya dtstingubh
the novice from the expert by the
amount or snow on his elothes."
F'ather also showed tome very ex­ceptional
and beautiful l,ieturu
of the processions in Swltzct·hind
on Corpus Chl'isti SuncJny, These
processions move through the main
streets of the town and back to
the chw-ch.
~has\$ on the principlta underly ..
mg a eonstitution. Still another it
the implication in so much o{ the
writing of the last. twenty yean
that all the really great issu .. are
unimportant-but that all obsta·
ele.s to seeurity were due to cer­tain
classes or individuals who for
some obscu:re reason wanted war.
Sir Norman Angell spoke of tho
"hopeless intellectual and moral
confusion. contradiction and clus
di.&tinct-ton" in which Wl'itera hnd
up,·ovcd" the impossibility or what.
is taking plAte now- instcnd ot
warning us again6t. it. '' la It not
true.'' he as.ks, flthnt we prontcd
by past errors?"
Your Lilcruy I. Q.
The following ftve aenteneu de­se.
ribe medic.al men well known in
literature. Can you rtm~mber
them!
I. With a box of jewelo and the
a.sistanee oC Mephiotopheles this
Renaissanc.e scholar won the a!·
lectioD.J or a pure and simple
young girl.
2. As medical atudont. at. the
University of rngolstodt, he con.
~t•·uctcd a man o.ut or 8ome otlds
and ends of endA.veJ'S and endowed
it with lite by u.sing ~' IJ)rtl'k of
lightning.
3. Eighteen years in th<': Bat­tille
with nothing but cobbling to
do to pass the time had consider.
ably damaged thia doetor'a mind.
4. Swallowing a ~ompound of
his own prfleription tranaformed
this eminently respectable physi­cian
into a deformed and evn
6end.
5. Wounded in the ahouldor (or
was It the leg!) during the Bat·
tie of Raiward, he waa invalided
and brought home to London
where be took lodglngo In Baker
Nazarenes Disco·Yer
Sailor Hat In Gym­Now
Search for Sailor
[t is just a little nnvy blue hnt
cnretully trimmed with gold. There
is nothing exceptional about. thit
hat !o1· there are thousands jutt
Uke it. Tbe only exceptional thine
abou' this bat is the place it was
found.
Yes, tho! gold trim spells U. S.
~a\•y, and it is on a sailor hat
whieh was found in the JYID· 'So
one seems to know where the sail­or,
the compliment to the hat. iJ
or was. or where he came from or
went to; in short it b a sailor
mystery.
or course. since. a sailor is such
a very unusual sight AI'OUnd Nnz.
ai'Cth, thet·e is a chance that he
may h1•ve been mobbed and in this
case was forced to leave in a hu•··
ry thu• forgetting hi• hat. Thlt
m\l5t have been most embnru.saing
!or him when he returned to hia
ahip hatlws.
There have been uneonftrmed
reporu that be i• tall, blond and
''not 10 bad;'" others say he il
1-hort.. but mighty niee, -·ith '•that
certain something.''
However, it would not be just
if lhia poor sailor were eourt mar­aballed
(or whatever they do to
Nilon) on Nazareth's atcount, 10
the Cleaner offers a reward or one
plug nic.kel or one ••sampson Spe ..
cial" lor information Jeadin.g to
his whereabouts.. Come on, &irla.
give the rest of U!> a chnnee.
Street. r------------,
(Anawon on Paao G)
arranging the convention wu inlr------- ------,1 NUTRITION AND
the capable honda of t'alher V in­SCHOOL
WORK
cent P. McCorry, S. J., of Cania­iu•
College. A I though Father Dan­iel
A. Lord, S. J .. wu not able 1<>
be present, the central office or the
Sodality was ably repre.sented b)•
Father Francb P. LeBuffet S. J.,
and Father J . Ro~r Lyons, S. J.
Father Vincent 1. Bellwoar, S. J.t
delivered the invocation.
Complimenll!
of
McConnell
Milk & Ice, Inc.
Pittaford, N. Y.
On the atage, Mary Jane Hen· '------------...!1
drick wa.s Nazareth'• official rep.. .------------~ 1
resent.ative: and VfrginiR Sullivan
gave the openlnr 81udont •ddress.
Try Your Drug Store Firat
RA TJONING and the acarclty
of some food produet.s demand
more Bkille.d attention to the
preparation of lunehes., bolh
for war workers and ~hoot
atude.nt.s.
Both need wholesome, nut.li·
lious food if they are to do
their b•st, and keep ftt and
healthful.
At tbe regubu meeting o! the
Euehnriatic Committee in March.
the fourth and fifth chapters of
Abbe l\Jn1·mion's Chr,st, tho Life
of the Soul were discussed by
Ma1·y Jano Hendrick and Helen
MAcchio.
"\Vhnt lll'C )'0\1 nnyway?" theyJ , - ------------.1 COSMETICS . FILM
STATIONERY
Our Home Service Dept. baa
worked out etTectlve plana for
maintaining lunches at maxi·
m u ru nutritional standards,
while keeping them within tho
limits of war time budgets.
For further i"formation contult
our Homo Service Department i +
The no,·cna for nice weatherf
for May Day begins on May 6.
'rl\t• "nv-n• ronnddA nf the reci-~
••ked.
''Why, l'rn €naign Smith. I'm
t'CJ)OrUng Cor duty!'
'
4 And why the captain's hat?"
HOh, is it a captain's hat ! 11 the
young man replied. u1 didn't
know. I juot bought my unilorm
,. ~terdav and 1 oicked out this
Haubner &
Stallknecht
FUNERAL HOME
828 Jav Street
The
Central Pharmacy
Pittaford. N. Y.
89 Ea.st Ave·n\lo
Rochester Gas &
• l
\
1
THE G L E A NER 5
Ensign Strolls Up Nazareth's Walk,
Disrupts American History Class
Nazareth Alumnae
In the News
Committee Begins Work of Selecting
Costumes For May Day Pageant
As Students Admire The View By MARIETTE WICKES '45
The Alumnae Association of
PeaeefuUy unaware of the ripple of excitement going thr-ough Nazare:th College, aware or the
his American Hiatory claM, Dr. Abell continued his lecture on the value of spiritual 1·enewat during
radical repubJicans of the 1't~eonstruction en,, this sea•on of the commemoi'Atlon
It stat·ted in tho buck of the window. Bccouso of his position, of Chl'iat's Passion und D~nlh, will
room, one day not too long ago. at that momenL, the young naval have u dny of recollection at the
A student, nttrncted by the love .. officer could not be seen by Dr. college on Palm Sunday, April
liness of a spring day, turned Abell. Somewhat punled. but no 18.
slowly toward the window. Sad· doubt attributing the window gaz- , That. ubiq,uitous little bird an ..
de..nly, a low gasp eseaped her, ing and sighs to apring fever. be nouncH to us that Rosemary Rati·
and she &tared anxiously out the grinned and aid, _.Familiar seen· pn '36 hu a new job with the
window-her notu forcotten. One ery, itn't. it!" and continued his Roc-heater Catholic Charities. Also
by one, heads tumtd. as if by lecture. The girls realized that he that 8eny Creene, '42 is now do·
magic, and eyea became glued to had not yet seen the object of at. ing her p.ilrt for the war effort in
Na.ta.reth's familiar path. Subdued traction. und bcgnn to Jaugh in the re.earch Jaboratory of_ East­giggl..
and Impish grins opread ea1·nes1.. When Do·. Abell looked man Kodnk.
ftust. and furloutly. Before long, out the window a second time, he We hcHu· ra·om New Je&'SC)f thul
the radicul rcpublieana were com· saw the reMOn for such disturb· Hoscmnry Foley, '40, is \'ery en·
piotoly forgotten bcenuse walking ance, and laughed wholeheartedly thu•lastlc about her job with the
up t.he path, utorting- an elderly "'ith the atudent.a. Army Signal Corps at Fort Mon·
lady, was a tall, atrai.aht figure in mouth.
the familiar blue of a Naval offi- Another note of war--time .activ.
c~r. Is it any wonder that deep 15 Yeu• Aco In Th• Cleaner itr-Mabel Perdue '32, has been
sighs were h<!ard tbrou,hout the Tbe former College colonJ, white placed In eharce of the Red Cross
l"OOm! and gold, have been changed to Committee of the Women's Cham·
Becoming awa1'e, at last, that the more vivid and more beautiful her of Commerce. Congratula.
aomething was amiu, OJ•, AbeJI colors, purJJie ~tnd gold. The deep tions!
also directed his gnxe toward the shade o! pu•·ple mak~s 1\ mol'e at· Among Na;uu-eth's social work-
S. R. 0. Brightens
Post-Vacation Days
tractive bnekg•·ound to.- the more ers who Al'C again working in
delicnte gold which has always RocheatCJ', aCt4W n !ew months
been symbolic of Nazareth. lt is work at Centro! Islip Hospital,
hoped thOL Lhese colors wiU gain Long Island ore Mary Sullivan
new significance and meaning '39, Susan Jane f:\'ans, '39, and
with the pauinl' )'ears and become Morga.-.t Burgett Griffin.. '39.
very dear to the hearts ot aU tnae Mary 11 workin& at Child Plact·
1\a.zare.th College cirls. ment. Divi~ion, Sue is at Old Act,
• • and Marcaret is at the State Uos.
Many a man t.hinks he is get· pit.al.
Nazarents returning to college
after Ea.4tter \'ltation this year
will be ehcered by the prospect of
S.R.O., which will be produced the
following week In the college audi­torium.
ting on with a womsn until she Another alumna who has added
t.e11s him whe1·c to get ott. her name to the list of engaged i.s
Carolyn Rov•a, Pa t Coodwin a.nd Beverly J on ..
ra.nsa.ck t r unSc (or May Day costu me•.
The plot of Lhis year's show~
"The St.agc OoOI' Campai.gn,'J
finds Brenda a n d Genevieve,
played by Joan Dug•n and Mar:;
Farrell, in a New York boarding
botue', bemoaning the wutt of
their unrequitCO:d talenUJ. That
Genevieve i.s a b«autiful blues
The mnn who continunll)· blows
his own horn usually stays at the
little end.
t 0 Y ••r• Aao In The Clean er
Modern H iltor)• paper contained
this answer:
Elinol' AIR)', '40. She t·eecntl)• un·
nounecd hc1· engagement to Fl·tmk
Mocejun01, who is the brotheo· ot
lsah•l and Olga Mocejuna:!.
Mary Jane Ward, ' 41, who re·
cently Joined the \V AAC's. is now
at•tlontd at Fon Belvoir, \·irginia.
Quartet of Priests Entertain With Vocal
Solos-Or. McNamara Scores Triumph
Singing "Santa Lucia" In Italian
siDge_r and Brenda an incompar­able
dancer hu not apparent.ly
impNssed any of the producer~
whose port..ala they habitually
storm.
A newspnpcr nnnnunccs that
Arson Yells, the rat.her of all pro­ducers,
plans to gl~an the talent
for his new ahow from the musical
comedy put on annually by the
girls of She•rciU'Ce Colltgt. Which
111 do not know just what to say
Nor how to aa)• h. an)oway
So here's m)' paJJ.er almost blank
And aurcly me you ought to thank
For saving you t.hc work
Of getting me n great big mark."
Na1.1u·cth College ha:! recently
formed • big alsler gt'Oup. '£he
aim of the big sister is to help
othe.r r i r J • u&ually somewhat
younger t.h.an them.selves with
their problems.
So amid the April ftowtn and
ahowera. the Alumnae Aaoc.iation
has worked and prayed u wen aa
ever.
Globular Gleanings
By FRANCES CULl '46
Chance uncO\'ers some or lhe
grealest virtuosos or the present
day. Recently. :-iazarelh Colle...,'•
elaten and boarders wero tho ln ..
11h·ument8 by whieh juet euch n
discove•·y was made, nnd lour
names were added to the roater of
the immortal$.
bit of neWJ: throws them imme- S Y4!u• Aao In The Cle-aner without cesaation. causing an e\'tr just want~ to be coaxed. To be-cliff'e
College bu~o a baggy sweater Feminine deairH: deepentng dent in the Hank of gin with. Fat.her O'Connell of
Sha.dowa over Nor-th Africa ha\'C
bad an increuingly ominous
1'wing-apread" latel)'· U n i t e d
State6 bombers and fighte.r plants
have nined destruction almost
They claimed the)' could oing
onl)' the .. Credo.'' but. tbty really
and a couple of undernourished 1. Timid ty1~wants someone Rommt"l'a coastal belt. Nazareth Academ)' mont or leu
pig-taUs! to protect. her from the world. The capture of Sedjenanc. only willingly watbled "A Little Bit 0'
So ofT they go, to become hilar· 2. Oomineel'ing type-wants a thit·ty.Ave miles southwest of Ill· Hctwen." Not to b" ouMone, FAt.h·
iously involved with the Me:ss•·s . .. )•es'' man. 1.crt.c, huge Axis nuval base, mtu·kw Cl' llaffy of Aquinas gnvc out with
Shakespeare and CucsRt', not to 3. Athletic type-wants a su· another "V'' on out· sco•~eb011rd. ''Believe Me Jt All Tho~ Endear·
nlt.ntion Olive, the college fruit, per-man. Oet• fo·uehrur's long d t<eamed of lng Young Charm~." Representing
played by Marilyn Moore, and the 4. lntellect,unl type- wants A 01ca&t1ta in the air .. look mighty the c-ollege, Dr. Lintz. made hia
frustrated dreamt or Miss Nobly, man with an I. Q. or 1938 or like tl)•ing rortresse5 now. In hia debut sin,-ing ~-when lrllb Eyea
a would-be diva, played by Betty abo\·e. plana for world conquest, he over~ Are Smiling/' and a very neat. job
Keepn. 5. Talkalivt typo - "'""'" a looktd tht fact that the olty 1$ port -------------
Others in the cut. who are: busy man who can take it. of iL A man had been discovered
with reheara.l1 in the Speec-h 6. The average girl wants a Church bt"lls will remain silent dead, and the jury were punle.d
it was. The climax of the program
was reached when Dr. McNamara,
Nazareth's conservAtive religion
JH'ofessor, suddenly went Lntin
nnd rendered ·•sunta Luciou in
Italian. All were accompanied
with flourishes on the piano by
Father Ehmann.
The effect of lhl$ llttlo protrram
on the pe_r(ormera themselves
would ha\·e rema.ined fore\•er a
m)'rttery bad it not been for Dr.
Reddington of SL Btmard'o Sem­inary
who gave out with the infor·
mation that & certain professor of
A ,,ologctics and Catholic doctrine
wns pretty much plea8cd with his
vocalizations. Although Or. Mc­Namal'a
frantically denya any such
thoughts on the aubject, It is re·
ported on reliable .authority that
he got in a little practice in prep.
aration for the above mentioned
debut at Nazareth while playing a
fast game of pool with s.everal
Theater are }~Iorence McGinnis. man. (Period!) in England for the duration o( the priests. 81 to what caused his death. Fin.
Gerrie Vandewa~1·, Jane Thu:rs-1------------- war. The ban had been imJ:toted Ally, they stated: .,It wa.s on Act lr ------------,
ton, Rosemary Welch, Kay Foley, BOARDERS ELECT os o tll'ecoution in the days of the of Cod under very suspicious eir -
Doris Ann .Fiohcrty, Frl\neis Gull Jnvn.Aion th1·cut, but the newly ro· cumstnnces.."
and Nancy Brown. Toni Luraschi, AGNES MURTHA enforced rule, although deemed
Pat Goodwin, Marion Mnul, Fran· unnceeuary by the Church, is per· ,.------------..,
ces Claire O'Reilly, Carolyn Ro. haps n wi.se move. The quiet bell&
vu, Mildred Clark, and Mary Agnea Murtha, belted known a.a nre a silent rehearsal for the great
Esther Dane.hy are also adding .. Ag" or •• Arony ," put that little day when they shall toll not only
thtir bit ror • Uperfectu show. town. PuluJd, on the map last our victory. but the knell or Hit·
Meanwhile the c.horus wends its Thu..rsday whtn the was elected ler's parting day.
tircless way through a series of house preaidtnt. Ag was a member (Continued on Page 6)
song$ and dancea in the gym, guid- of the ftrat trraduating class from I:--------------;
ed by Joan Ougl\n And Doris Dier· the new Pulaski Academy and was
dorf. first aaxophoniat in the school Wm. F. Predmore
Relirious Articles for
Service Men
P rayor Book• ... Ro • .ar-ie.a
Medals .a_nd Cha.ia•
Creel-ina Car cla
93 STAT£ ST. MAIN 3279
Songs fo1• the &how hnve been bnnd. She lo11owed two sist~rs
written by FIOI'encc McGinnis and here to Nuxoreth so needc~ no ll~·
Genie vandewat.tr, Rosemary! lroduction when .she arnv~d. t
Tierney, Doris Ann Flaherty and 1 seems tha~ Lh~rc ts some kind o(
Franees GuH, Doria Dierdorf, Joan 1 ~n attraeta~n. an the M~rtha !am·
Dugan, l!Udred Clarke, and sev-IIIY for sohta~r".; and If. Ag fol·
era! othe,... Mu.lc will be provided low .. m tht. fam1ly tradition. that
for tht show by one of the well· ~htai ... whlth &he playa so m~ch
known local orchettras. JS apt to beeome .some other kind !'============::; . of solitaire. Behmd that happy· 1,
The ehorus tor S. R. 0. wtll be go.tueky and euy-going manner
~omposed of a number of Fresh· you wHI find con1mon sense and
men. and Sophomo.rea. They are depend:tbUlty; and wo know she
Gerrte Knttpp, Jossao Ann ~utler, wiU make n awell house president.
Jeanne Lennon, Ktttey F aseher, flere'a luck In your new position,
Jane Gaffney, Mary Eother Dane- Ag
hy, Rosemary Mascari, Dolores ·
Meyer, Claire Yarter, and Dorothy -----------­Smith.
Othen who will add to the
musical background of the show
will be- Virginia Klee, Mary Ann
Lane, Dorla- Dierdorf, Pat Gleason,
Wilma McCormick, Kay Hogan
and Heltn Rauber.
ROCHESTER
STATIONERY CO.
108 MILL STREET
Main 7186
VAY
Funeral Home
604 Maple Street
FAVORS - TROPHIES
CLUB JEWELRY
SCHOOL and COLLEGE
RINCS
The Metal Arts Co.
Inc.
742 Portland Ave.
Rochester, N. Y.
"Our Representative
Will Gladly Call"
Perdue & Company
ln~orp orated
Eugiueers- Coufraclors
Heating • Ventilatinr
Plumbinr
65 BROAD STREET
M ain 4894 Rocho•ter, N. Y.
TOWN TALK
BAKERY, Inc.
601 PULLMAN Ave.
Phone
Glenwood 6772
EYery Day
We Go
Your Way
--
6 THE GLEANER
l April Showers Flood Nataretlt With Drippy Goiugs-011
SPO R T SO R AMA Or. Ab..ll hopea that all tbe
things that boarders ll't hoarding
spoil.
ln Scripture Cl•u Father Lintz
made the otatement thot 8,000
souls weJ'e baptized on the fi.-st
Pentecost. l-Ie then went. on to ask
"How could all thc•e people be
baptized at. onc:c!" Virainia Could
suggested n r$iu&t.onn. NccdlcJ~S
to say Lhi.a i.s not the cor1·cct an­!
Jwer.
Betty Keeaan Hashed her Red
Crose ctrllticate (unconseiO\l$1y,
we hope). to two bus driven ont
morning: wit.hout having it called
to her attention. When a third bU$
driver pointed lO the pau and
yjd, uSay, silter, what"a that!"
Betty without looking at the pa""
uid: ''Haven't. you ever teen one!
I've been us1ng thcn1 aine:e last
September."
Kay Foley, Dori• Ann Flaherty •nd Franco• Culi
koop t1"im with an oc.ca1iona.l 1ame of buketb•ll.
That long week .. and n few weekfJ
ttgo wa.s jual the thing for Jo•nne
Earley who went t.o Elmirn nnd
Mary Atu\ Ludwia who spent he1·
days in Fltunburg. Muy MeDer·
mott ond Auau•t• Coaentin• also
went to Elmi•·n. Louhe Conloy en­joyed
a brief stay in lthata. Hooey
SPRINC IS HERE
THE GRASS IS RlZ
I WONDER WHERE
THE FLOWERS lSI
Tho ~try is bad, tloe gummar
it worse, but how well that (!:X­P""
.... the lightheaded feeling we
all have now that spring fever has
fliLered through these halls of
learning. ll is even a temptation
to be out. hiking now instead of
wl'iling down all the great spot'tS
event&. But, here goes!
non. Rulh Stutchburr, Kay Cutler, Bauman went to Toronto. All re·
Ann Boaan. Jay Butler, Kay porta sound like fun.
Foley. Mary Farrell. Clue Cop.a. Terry Riley aetms mighty hap..
biaoc.o and Ann Hutc.hin.a.oa. py. Her glow is the l'ftUit of a
After the games, guests and visit home rt"C:ently.
bost~S&tl were ~vived with cook- Jar Butler~. friends wi.h to
lea and punch. Dottie Re.dd.inaton, compliment her by aaying that the
chairman of the hospitality com- embltm.J abe'• aportlng go well
mittee, was uaist.ed by Betty War. with her hair.
ney, Jun Flanar•n, Jtita Pielc:un. Kay HoJ•n'a e:orre1pondenee is
ka, Dottie Woaman, Jean Folet, l'apidty incrcttslng. We understand
Carolyn Rov••• Mae Florence the on·ru.sh is coming from Fot·t
Kummor nnd Pat O'Crady. Myel._, Flol'ido.
Bnsketbntl gnmes Rl'e now being I Where does Mary E•ther Dane­replaced
by volleyball tournaments by get that Intoxicating laugh dur­and
aortball contests.. M .... Mor· ing clut!les?
a•n haa orrnnlzcd a new Sunset. M arion Maul IUft\1 to •njoy
Baaeball League ~or the_ boarders translating Latin. ller lat .. t a<­-
theH pmes wtll begm at the eomplishment ton.sitta of her being
<onclusion of the volleyball toum- able to put It Into poetry.
We find some unique fonns of
••humor around school,'' but Pat
Goodwin and Ruth Loren& demon ..
•trated som~blng diWe~nt on
April 1 by ~nnoune.ing lo the Jun ..
ior class that there! would be no
Ontology class.-SeriJ)ture inetead.
So everyone came p1·cpnred fot·
Scriptw·c. Boardeta even went so
tar a& to call the ''dol'm" to have
someone bring the ScripLure books
ove•· to class. Even Fathe1· Lint1
was in on the job.
lsst week Dorothy Reddinaton
spent all her spare time diaplaying
her emeralds. She wanll everyone
to !<now that they are a rift from
Jimmie who bas joined the armed
sel"\'ice.
If any Soph wants to know what
will be asked on Lhe next exam,
just ask Bett,- Warncy. Sh• alway•
knows.
Some day we will sec n sign
reading "Kummer ,1u1d Rova.1, l"c.
- Mathematic-ian•." They alwnya
cooperate on nny p1•oblem. Dr.
Eastham can bnck thia atotemcnt.
up.
The Sophomore Chua i1 mourn·
ing the departure of 11Suuie/' the
Caithlul car of Pat O'Cr•dy. "SUJ.o.
sie," because of old age, has been
turned over to olher hands.
Eau de Cologne baa auch a po­tent
perfume that. Jo&A Dua•n had
to open Lhe window in Philosophy
da.ss after the word waa men·
tioned.
\Ve understand t. hat Botty
Thornpaon is receiving a lot of
mail lately, I!Oi><ciolly in big en­velopes.
A young lady received an en ..
velope addressed In familiar hond­W1iting
from one of our far·nu.ng
urny outpost!. Inst.ead of the ex·
peeled letter, she found lnoide a
slip of paper $Aylng:
'~o ur boy friend atilllovea you,
but be talb too much." Censor.
MUSICALITIES
By RITA MEYERS '44
l lln)' ~az.are.nes attende.d the
Music Conferen~e held in Roc.h.
ester recently. The discuuiona and
sessions of this conference stre.ued
t.he need for tlu.~ re:orient.ation of
music-teaching curricula to meet.
t.he demands of present conditione
and to prepare adcqu:ttel)' rot•
post,..wal' plans. 1t i.s remntknblo
to note how the colleges and music
schools are g-eal"ing their progrnma
to fit these government needs.
The Nazareth College Glee Club
pnrtidpated in 3 joint conctrt
with the Glee Club of Caniaius
College, Buffalo, last Sunday. Tbe
girls were gMeted by an enlhuai...,.
tie audience and the u.suat 11' ..
cious hospitalit-y which Canisiu.:
men always extend to Nat.a~tb
students. Among the selec:Uona 10
abl)• performed, was the "Jeau,
Rex Admira.bilis, by Palist.rlna.
A noth{ll' item on the Glee Club's
cnlcndsu· of imp01·tant cvent.s waa
a concert given at ~1 meeting of
the Chamber of Commerce loJt.
evening. The gil'Ls snng "Watct ..
Ripple and Flow,, "The Cobblel'S
Jig," and "My Lindy Lou."
Recently the Musi< Club apon­aored
a sympos.iom forum with
Patritia Doyle as thairman. Thit
session disc\lSS.ed the main prob­lems
of the war-time inatitut.CI and
the fundamental needs in the
music-education program of the
p~nt. The Senior music m.ajot"'
acted as di.se\lSSion leaders.
A very unu.i~iual recita,l wa• he ld
last Tuesday, when the six Junior
music students conducted choral
numbers. Sophomores and f'r.c&h·
men were the singers.
Recently the Nat ional Cothollc
Music A3sociation was formed
with executive represent.Rtivea in
each state. Na~areth ia proud to
learn that Sister Kathleen haa
been appointed exKutive repr.,.
aentative for ~ew York St.at.t.
The long nwnit.ed play day was
held In the gym Friday u!ternoon,
April 2, with many cit)' schools
reprettnted. It was lots of fun tor
all! When the guests arrived, they
were welcomed by memben of the
Sophomore Class; in the actual
aporta competition, it was Freah­men
athlete& who took 1"'"- The
bul<etball gamea in P"rticular
wtre exdtinc; and the coopera­tion
of players !rom different
tc:hoo1s was something to behold 1
ament whoae pmea are played on Everyone wu clad to welcome
Wednuday ni.chts. Tidrr Gianin:i'a Jane Thu ... eon back lo school alt.- --:::===::;:===================:: volle1ball t e a m of Freshmen ., her recent llln-.
Those stars representing tbe c::oJ.
lege included Eileen Fa.rloy, Ter ..
eaa C.allaaher, Tic.ky Giannini,
Alice V• nde Voorde. Jea"no Len·
Globular Gleanings
( Continued from Page 5)
Under eover of •·aging storms
off Cape Gloucester a convoy of
Jap ohlpo attempted to ftee from
menacing Allied planes, it was re­ported
from New Guinta bead­quarters..
The low·hanging clouds,
however, we.re infested with Unit,.
ed Statea planea which swooped
down upon their prey-proo£ that
"'every c:loud bAS a silver Hninc''
and that perhaps the rising sun
iA playing t.ricks on the upsetting
10na of Japan.
boarden defeated the Sophomore Tbe Senior tla.u aeema to b6
ttam in two pmta in the first boarding diamonda. The recent
eont.eat, but the ~phomorea came additions to the liat of engaged
baek to take the thtrd game. These are Roaom ... y Tierney and June
weekly battle&, a.s . ~ell as the Smith. CongnltuhltionA I
Lally-Araont,or-' phyttcnl culture Ouc:k Oierdorf seemed t.o have
t-1A33C& are hal~ing lo keep the t•eceived n roynl ''ducking" in the
boo.-dcr• on. t hCJr to~•· rnin the other nto•·nin{C. She looked
Olnmc thiS on aprmg fevel'. rather queer indeed with her head
Bye, ond keep trim! hanging out. or tho bus window.
Sportie Have you heard the song Joan -----4>---- Q Duaa.n is 1inging? It"• realJy dif ...
Answers to Literary I. - ferent.-<oll except the tune whieh
(Continued from Page 4) is "Glory, Glory, Halleluiah."
1. Henry Fault, in '4Faust" by Joyce Lohu• baa a number of
Goethe. ne_. \'e.rsea, too. They seem to
2. V I c tor Frankenstein, in Caseinate McCarth anyway.
"Frankenstein'' by )lary W. Sbel- ,-------------,
ley.
3. Dr. Manette, in 11 A Tale of
Two Citlea" by Dickens.
4. Dr. Jekyll, in "Dr. J ekyll and
Mr. Hyde" by R. L. Stevenson.
b. Dr. Johr. A. Watson, in "A
Study In Searlet" by A. C. Doyle.
Main 8140
Barnard, Porter
& Remington
Pai;.~~!·~~~~"::~!sB~~~es,
Orawln~r Supplies
9-1 1-13 North Water St.
Roc.beater, N. Y.
Meat on the Table Means
GOOD EATING
Alwaya Bu y
ARPEAKO
Meat Products
Rochester Packing
Company, Inc.
Daniel J . Tobin, president o(
the A. F. of L.'a largest union, t he
Temn1ters, evidences disgust at
the lncaptobllity of labor to achieve
an \lnderstnnding. He d eclored
that C. I. 0. ond A. F. L. unity
.. n be bTought about only i! each
tide abandons it8 Hgreat desire for
full sixteen ounces of its pound of
fteah." It may be added that sell­ilhnta
ia one thing that t.an. be
advant.ageouJiy rationed to the
vanlJhinc poinL. IL---------- - ....l'L---------- - - '1
Meat has gone •'"Friday" eix
da)'l or the week apparently. Elm­er
Davia, 0. W. I. dire<:tor, stated
that even wit.h the new ration on
meat our belts stm aren't 41tig-ht ­onad
much." Gone are the days of
tho '£-bone steaks. Now even Old
Motheo· Hubbard is worried.
Cheering news for the futuro-­Ill
least they'll never ration food
l or t.hought-but who eares?
Malden aunt, asked to advise
her niece as to whethe.r or not ahe
ahou1d many her $01d.ier fianc:e,
DRINK ONLY THE BEST
Sea/test Homogeuized
Tlitamiu D Milk
--------·· -- .. ---. ·-....
"Did you know that high
altitude makes you terri·
bly thirsty~ 'Dehydrates',
they coli it. Who wouldn't
want on ic.e<Oid Coke.
Coco -Colo not only
quenchH thirst, it odds
refresfvnt!f'lt, too. And taJto
••• o deliciousneu all its own.
And quality you count on.
Makes you glad you were
11\ir>ty."

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VOL. XVlll THURSDAY, APRIL 15, 1943 No. G
Nazareth Offers SENIORS VOTE
Summer Courses 'YES' FOR BALL
Sessions To Include
Academic Subjects,
Vocational Work
~azartth College will offer a
number of counes in vocational
fields t,his summer on rtqUHt or a
minimum of eight students. The
courses .at-e designed for students
who want an intensive cout-se in a
vocational skill, in order to tit.
them rol' Aonte special wm· service.
The length o! the single int..cns·
ivc course, beginning on June 21,
1943, will be an equivalent fifteen
weeka in u regular college pro ..
gram and will carry three col1ege
ereditt:. Such intens.ive courses
will be a-h·en from two to three
hourt a day. fh•e days a week., tor
four weeks or less. depending on
individual pro~ and efficiency.
Some of the alrJtin Goodwin, and
refo•e•hmcnt.o, Ooo·olh~ flcdding­ton.
-- LIBRARY OPENS
DOLL EXHIBIT
Beginning Ytaterday, Pan .. Amtr­ican
Day, the txhibit roGm in the
library Is !eaturinr a display o!
costumr:d dolls. Theae represent.a­tives
of Spain and Latin America
have been drtged b)• the girls in
Miu Cu~;z.et.t.a'a Spanish elas.\.
In t.ho nea1· !utul"e, SiiJter Dom~
inle hopes to hnvc n colleetion of
dot111 including speeimcn11 [ J'Om
every country Jn the wo1·ld. A gen·
erou.a Rochestet·lnn hns offered
N .. arcth Coll• Cood rationing and lae.k or
trAnsportation the Junior Class is continuing plant for ita houseparty
and it determined to make it the biggest. and bHL party of the year.
erahip of Jeanne Te~dr, will soon Debate Club Sends
ArTangement.s, under the lead-,
be complete to obtam the Rottiry
Sunshine Camp at Durand Enst- Delegates To
man Pn•·k for the second week-end p C f
In May. With its trails, bench, eace on erence
lnrgc t•ccreation halt, and oil 0 Mnl·eh 26.27" another
facilities for hiking, riding, and n
An all uround (:ood time, the camp WA!J token towards a bettel' post­i•
a perfect setting for n perfect war world when students (rom a
week~end. number of nearby co11eges mtt at
The entertainment c:ommitlee Colpte Univuaity, Hamilton, ~ev.•
directed by Agnes llurtha usurea York to dbc-\111 plans for Lhe. new
us that preparations are well un­der
way for keeping e\·eryone hap­py
any hour of the day or nighL
All will have an ample opportun ..
it)' for their domest,ieity.
peac-t-.
Ruth Lo1-enz, Jean Foley, Jean
Schanu. and Claire Yarter rcpre-ae.
nted Na~areth College. Miss
The theme of the housepart)' RiUt Sc::ott, faculty adviser of t he
might. well be, •'t.he w~ek.end JJhall Debate Club. ateompanied the
be filled with mus ic, and the a.s ..
wlrcnmenls which infect the week girla. A lew of the other eoJieges
eholl told theh· tents like the •·epJ"C!sented we1•c Colgate, Elmira,
Arnb1 and ns silently steal nwny!' Wells nnd Wllllnms. The meetings
F ASHIONT ALK
By E ILEEN
With Easter in the offing, spring
clothes take the spotlight. SuiU.
are the thing in all tbe- popular
apring shades of pale grey, tocoa
brown, navy blue, and ye.llow.
Various &hades ean be s.uggeated
for ac-C'euories, but. for grey or
navy auits white i.& thP most popu­lar.
For coeoa brown, a e:ont:rut­lng
•hade or brown 01' kelly green
ia 3uggested, while with yeUow,
novy'a the thing.
For lhat "extro something" on
nny eull., t1'y some Kolinsky skins
or uble-dyed squirrel fur.
Cal fakin bags and shoe.s in
matching octo mo.kc o. ::;mGrt Com·
bination with • uits, coats or
dresa.H.
The beautiful spring ·weather
we've been e njoying lately brought
with It a hearty interto:!t in nev.•
apring and aummer e:ott-ens.. Stripes
with rutrlts seem to ~ about the
mOIL popular of the U\1'eraJ at.)'les.
A red and white peppermint st.riped
dreu , with three-quarter sleeves
and aquare ntck edged with ruf­nes
Ia very rresh and au.mme,.y.
Dutcher linen two-piece dreS1;ea
arc oxtl'(lme1y popular again this
ICA8on in navy, green, red, ye11ow
and brown.
took the fot•n1 of debates and dis--
c:u8slons.
Our repre.aentalive$ have l'e­marked
about the novel wa)'" in
which the discussions were carried
on. There wa• a permanent c:hair ...
man. a rotating •ub-committee,
and an expert wltne$5. Students as
well u ra~ulty advisors were wit-
A II the phuet of post-war plan­ning
-.•hi~h ~ould possjbJy be
brought. up In the ~ourse of four
disc.u.saions, were e:ons.idered-a
general back-ground organization,
and apctlne ptoposals for lrusting
peneo. The meeting ende!d with a
summn1·y or the conclu5ions ag-t���eed
upon by the cnth·e aq embly.
Seuiors "Schuul" Selves
For Teaching Po.sition.s
.. Where. 0 where, are the grave
old seniors! Safe now in the wide,
wide world."
Yes. they are ufe now in the
widr., wide world. Some of tbe.m
have jobs all lined up for next
year and numbered among them
tu·c Clal"i31-e Martens, Florence
McOinnlo. Ellen Flynn, Florence
Sin•, Virginia Jaznk and Ma>·eella
CauncJd.
ClArisse will u•e the golden rule
next year as the traditional
"8chool marm•• in the high school
In Gorham. New York. Clarisse
will teaeh both Latin and English.
FJorenct Mc:Cinni.s has just
obtained a job in Nunda, .Xew
THE GLEANE R
STUDENTS ELECT OFFICERS OF
UNDERGRAD FOR 1943-1944
New officer• of th• Und.,·vaduate Auociation, Mar;ieUe Wl·eeord too. For­tunately
h. is a good one too. Sec­retary
of the Fre1hman Class and
treasurer o! Underg1·ad are of ..
flees which hove given her a
chance to display hca· mnny tal·
ent.s. Did you know there is no
pulJing the wool ovcl· her eyes
when it. comes to lnmb? She loves
small towns, Medina eapeeially,
salt on be.r peanut butter sand­v.;
chee, and corporab who have
just been made aeregant.t-, and
card!, but ap.are her from Bob
Hope, waiting lor people. getting
up in the moming, and calling- her
roommate.
Mariette Wickes gave up the
position of secretal'y of Undcrgrad
to take over that of t.a•ea&ut-et·.
She also is an able student and a
very vel·satllc one. Lllngungca
s~etn to be a cinch for he~
French and Spanish especially.
S.R.O. is weJI on ita way to auc:­c:.
ess this year under her eap.nbte
direction.
Mariette love. tea-in faet, she
loves it .so much that ahe waten
her tea bag on an avera.ce of t\ve
times every noon hour. Among
her favorite apot"tl are awimming,
bicycling and basketball.
Kay Cutler c:ame from A ubum
to take over the dut.iu Rrat of
Freshman Student Council repre­sentative
and then of JSecreLary of
Undc1·grad. She hat an amazing
talent for organizing things. Sports
nre all down he.- alley; und hel's
is one case where that l'Cd hair
does not mean n 8ery tcmpe1'.
Besides sports, she likes cherry
pie. John in the ca.feterla, tho cot ...
or brown. She especially dlallkea
people who do not reapond hnme ..
diately-wbetber it ia to leu.en
or ci:n:umstanc~
8
"Being" in Scripture Cla.s.s
l.s April Fool ( i.slme.ss)
It 's: a funny thing, but one day
a short time ago the Juniors ac­tually
had run in "dear, o1d acrip­ture."
So did their teather.
It happened thal thio term lhe
Junior Ch•so has both ontology
and scripture on Thursday - on·
tology at 10:20 and scripture at
I :05--·emin Mission
Unit would like to thnnk the
glrla of Nazareth CoUege tor
tho wonderful spirit of enthu­alaam
and cooperation they have
shown during the year.
·------------------+
lon~r ago for a day and she hlrayer of all, peace and
order will be onco again restol'ed
in the world and that the bellig­erent
fore~• will soon lay down
arms.
The Xavier !Jerald- Mar., 1943
Recently a Captain's eap ap­peared
in the Navy Department
with a pink..cheeked young faee:
under it, not a day over 19. The
boy wore a navy raincoat, which
bore no insignia. While eledr-l.fted
spectators wnt.ched, he stripped il
off, revealing nn enaign'a .stl'ipe on
his sleeves.
THE GLEANER
LIT LAB
By ERICA KLEMENS '45
E,·erybody Is talkinr about the
greatHt problem o! the luture:
the foundations of the posm the
leading high Khoola and coUeges
in western New York reported on
what their scboots we..., doing and
planned what further 11teps eould
be tnken by Catholle youth to en·
sut·e a ujust and lneting pe .. ce."
Mon•fgnor Leo A. Smith preeid·
ed ln the nbsencc of Biahop DufTy
or Bu!Talo. Tho I'CIJ>Onoibility of
Dr. Lintz and Dr. McNamara Entertain
Boarders In European Travelogue
The boarders have ~en aeeing Or. Md\amara showed moviet
''stars" lately. Yes. and these of his tra\~ets in Palestine, Egypt,
stars are movie stan. Said 1tara ltal).. France, and Austria. An·
also produce their own pfeturu, cient history students enjoyed the
and these producers nnd atAt'l are \•iewa o{ the Temple or Kal"nftk,
none other than Dr. Lintz and Dr. the P>••·amid.s and the Pantheon.
MeNnma1·a. The movies \\'1!1'0 Erica KJemcns particulurly liked
shown on two ditf4wcnt occaaionM those scenes of Venice. The pic­and
wcr"C taken b)• the priests tures in Palestine followed the
during theh· trips abroud. Way o! the Cross as it ls now. The
Dr. Lint:'s were taken in Switz- processions at Lou1-des were made
erland, some o! them depicting 1 through the streets, as were those
the attempts of the novices to mas- in Swib:erland i but most beauti.
ter the ort ot okling with oome di ... ful of all was the torchlight pro.
astrous results. E'·en ir he w .. a ee:gion at night around the statue
litUe reluetant to tell who the of Our Lad)'.
novi.ee was that "bit the dual/'
C\'t.ry good •kier deserves • rest
now and apin. To quott: Dr.
Lintz, •'You can alwaya dtstingubh
the novice from the expert by the
amount or snow on his elothes."
F'ather also showed tome very ex­ceptional
and beautiful l,ieturu
of the processions in Swltzct·hind
on Corpus Chl'isti SuncJny, These
processions move through the main
streets of the town and back to
the chw-ch.
~has\$ on the principlta underly ..
mg a eonstitution. Still another it
the implication in so much o{ the
writing of the last. twenty yean
that all the really great issu .. are
unimportant-but that all obsta·
ele.s to seeurity were due to cer­tain
classes or individuals who for
some obscu:re reason wanted war.
Sir Norman Angell spoke of tho
"hopeless intellectual and moral
confusion. contradiction and clus
di.&tinct-ton" in which Wl'itera hnd
up,·ovcd" the impossibility or what.
is taking plAte now- instcnd ot
warning us again6t. it. '' la It not
true.'' he as.ks, flthnt we prontcd
by past errors?"
Your Lilcruy I. Q.
The following ftve aenteneu de­se.
ribe medic.al men well known in
literature. Can you rtm~mber
them!
I. With a box of jewelo and the
a.sistanee oC Mephiotopheles this
Renaissanc.e scholar won the a!·
lectioD.J or a pure and simple
young girl.
2. As medical atudont. at. the
University of rngolstodt, he con.
~t•·uctcd a man o.ut or 8ome otlds
and ends of endA.veJ'S and endowed
it with lite by u.sing ~' IJ)rtl'k of
lightning.
3. Eighteen years in th a chnnee.
Street. r------------,
(Anawon on Paao G)
arranging the convention wu inlr------- ------,1 NUTRITION AND
the capable honda of t'alher V in­SCHOOL
WORK
cent P. McCorry, S. J., of Cania­iu•
College. A I though Father Dan­iel
A. Lord, S. J .. wu not able 1<>
be present, the central office or the
Sodality was ably repre.sented b)•
Father Francb P. LeBuffet S. J.,
and Father J . Ro~r Lyons, S. J.
Father Vincent 1. Bellwoar, S. J.t
delivered the invocation.
Complimenll!
of
McConnell
Milk & Ice, Inc.
Pittaford, N. Y.
On the atage, Mary Jane Hen· '------------...!1
drick wa.s Nazareth'• official rep.. .------------~ 1
resent.ative: and VfrginiR Sullivan
gave the openlnr 81udont •ddress.
Try Your Drug Store Firat
RA TJONING and the acarclty
of some food produet.s demand
more Bkille.d attention to the
preparation of lunehes., bolh
for war workers and ~hoot
atude.nt.s.
Both need wholesome, nut.li·
lious food if they are to do
their b•st, and keep ftt and
healthful.
At tbe regubu meeting o! the
Euehnriatic Committee in March.
the fourth and fifth chapters of
Abbe l\Jn1·mion's Chr,st, tho Life
of the Soul were discussed by
Ma1·y Jano Hendrick and Helen
MAcchio.
"\Vhnt lll'C )'0\1 nnyway?" theyJ , - ------------.1 COSMETICS . FILM
STATIONERY
Our Home Service Dept. baa
worked out etTectlve plana for
maintaining lunches at maxi·
m u ru nutritional standards,
while keeping them within tho
limits of war time budgets.
For further i"formation contult
our Homo Service Department i +
The no,·cna for nice weatherf
for May Day begins on May 6.
'rl\t• "nv-n• ronnddA nf the reci-~
••ked.
''Why, l'rn €naign Smith. I'm
t'CJ)OrUng Cor duty!'
'
4 And why the captain's hat?"
HOh, is it a captain's hat ! 11 the
young man replied. u1 didn't
know. I juot bought my unilorm
,. ~terdav and 1 oicked out this
Haubner &
Stallknecht
FUNERAL HOME
828 Jav Street
The
Central Pharmacy
Pittaford. N. Y.
89 Ea.st Ave·n\lo
Rochester Gas &
• l
\
1
THE G L E A NER 5
Ensign Strolls Up Nazareth's Walk,
Disrupts American History Class
Nazareth Alumnae
In the News
Committee Begins Work of Selecting
Costumes For May Day Pageant
As Students Admire The View By MARIETTE WICKES '45
The Alumnae Association of
PeaeefuUy unaware of the ripple of excitement going thr-ough Nazare:th College, aware or the
his American Hiatory claM, Dr. Abell continued his lecture on the value of spiritual 1·enewat during
radical repubJicans of the 1't~eonstruction en,, this sea•on of the commemoi'Atlon
It stat·ted in tho buck of the window. Bccouso of his position, of Chl'iat's Passion und D~nlh, will
room, one day not too long ago. at that momenL, the young naval have u dny of recollection at the
A student, nttrncted by the love .. officer could not be seen by Dr. college on Palm Sunday, April
liness of a spring day, turned Abell. Somewhat punled. but no 18.
slowly toward the window. Sad· doubt attributing the window gaz- , That. ubiq,uitous little bird an ..
de..nly, a low gasp eseaped her, ing and sighs to apring fever. be nouncH to us that Rosemary Rati·
and she &tared anxiously out the grinned and aid, _.Familiar seen· pn '36 hu a new job with the
window-her notu forcotten. One ery, itn't. it!" and continued his Roc-heater Catholic Charities. Also
by one, heads tumtd. as if by lecture. The girls realized that he that 8eny Creene, '42 is now do·
magic, and eyea became glued to had not yet seen the object of at. ing her p.ilrt for the war effort in
Na.ta.reth's familiar path. Subdued traction. und bcgnn to Jaugh in the re.earch Jaboratory of_ East­giggl..
and Impish grins opread ea1·nes1.. When Do·. Abell looked man Kodnk.
ftust. and furloutly. Before long, out the window a second time, he We hcHu· ra·om New Je&'SC)f thul
the radicul rcpublieana were com· saw the reMOn for such disturb· Hoscmnry Foley, '40, is \'ery en·
piotoly forgotten bcenuse walking ance, and laughed wholeheartedly thu•lastlc about her job with the
up t.he path, utorting- an elderly "'ith the atudent.a. Army Signal Corps at Fort Mon·
lady, was a tall, atrai.aht figure in mouth.
the familiar blue of a Naval offi- Another note of war--time .activ.
c~r. Is it any wonder that deep 15 Yeu• Aco In Th• Cleaner itr-Mabel Perdue '32, has been
sighs were h---- Q Duaa.n is 1inging? It"• realJy dif ...
Answers to Literary I. - ferent.-ty."